McLemore 1-and-done at Kansas; Ledo none-and-done at Providence

Ben McLemore is one and done at Kansas. Ricky Ledo is none and done with Providence.

McLemore, Kansas' talented freshman guard, was among several underclassmen who wasted little time in declaring for the NBA draft on Tuesday, the day after the college season ended.

Ledo, Providence, R.I., native, practiced with the Friars this season but never played because he failed to qualify academically. Practice was enough, apparently, to make him a possible first-round pick.

Indiana All-American Victor Oladipo announced he was giving up his senior season to enter the draft. New Mexico's Tony Snell also announced he was going pro.

The father of Louisville guard Russ Smith, who helped the Cardinals win a national title by beating Michigan on Monday night, says his son will also enter the draft.

In Lawrence, Kan., Jayhawks coach Bill Self said he's known for a while it was time for the 6-foot-6 McElmore to go.

"Ben kept telling us in February, 'Don't worry about getting anybody else. I'm coming back,'" Self recalled. "I said, 'Yeah, right. You want to make a public announcement?' ... If he told me he wanted to come back, I would have told him, 'We need to look at this again.'"

That's because McLemore's stock couldn't be much higher.

The second-team All-American is expected to be a lottery pick in June after breaking the Jayhawks' freshman scoring record held by Danny Manning. McLemore averaged nearly 16 points for a team that went 31-6 and won a share of its ninth straight Big 12 championship.

"My mom, we talked, my family, talked to the coaches, and I made the decision that I'm going to enter the NBA draft," said McLemore, who had several family members on hand at Allen Fieldhouse.

"I think it's the best opportunity to help me and my family out," he said, "and even as a kid, that's what I wanted to do. I have an opportunity to provide for my family."

McLemore was forced to redshirt last season when he was declared a partial qualifier by the NCAA, but he made the most of his only season in Lawrence. With a dizzying array of dunks, a silky smooth outside shot and a boyish grin, he quickly became one of the school's top players.

Ledo, another 6-6 guard, said "he could not pass up this opportunity to enter the NBA draft now."

In September, the NCAA ruled that Ledo could not compete in games for the Friars in 2012-13, but he did practice and work out with the team during the season. So the NBA scouts came to practice to get a look at Ledo.

A top-25 high school prospect, Ledo spent time at four different programs in five years of high school before receiving a scholarship from Providence.

Oladipo made his announcement at a news conference in Assembly Hall in Bloomington, Ind. He was the Hoosiers' second-leading scorer, averaging 13.6 points to go along with 6.3 rebounds per game.

He's on target to graduate in May.

Indiana is still awaiting word on whether sophomore center Cody Zeller will return or head to the NBA. He is expected to decide as early as Wednesday.

Smith's NBA future isn't as clear. He averaged 18.9 points as a junior this season, including 23.3 in six NCAA tournament games, but is listed at 6-foot and 165 pounds.

Snell averaged 12.5 points per game this past season and hit a team-high 64 3-pointers. He was the Mountain West tournament MVP.